Stephen Henry v. Fed. Reserve Bank of Atlanta

609 F. App'x 842
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 2015
Docket14-5618
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 609 F. App'x 842 (Stephen Henry v. Fed. Reserve Bank of Atlanta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephen Henry v. Fed. Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 609 F. App'x 842 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

Stephen Henry worked for many years in the Nashville office of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. In 2010, the bank decided to close the Nashville office, prompting layoffs of nearly all employees in the office by July 31, 2011. Henry was laid off a few months before the office closed (in May 2011) but received full pay and benefits through July 2011. In his view, the bank laid him off two months early based on discrimination against his religious beliefs, prompting him to sue the bank for creating a hostile work environment and for retaliating against him when he complained about it. The bank responds that it never treated him differently on account of his faith and never subjected him to a hostile work environment. The district court granted summary judgment in the bank’s favor. We affirm.

Stephen Henry considers himself a “priest in the Christian religion affiliated with Israel.” R. 34-10 at 93. His Christian “values and guidelines for behavior,” he explains, “often conflict with those of modern culture.” Id. at 118. And his behavior, he adds, sometimes conflicted with the expectations of his colleagues. All the same, he distinguished himself as a law enforcement officer in the Nashville office of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, where he had worked since 2004.

*844 In 2010, the Atlanta Federal Reserve announced that it would close the Nashville office, putting an imminent end to his career there. It planned to lay off nearly everyone in the building on July 31, 2011, keeping just a few experienced employees to facilitate the transition. Like most of his coworkers, Henry did not make the cut.

Unlike most of his coworkers, Henry had other workplace-related troubles. He asserts that his colleagues went out of their way to persecute him on account of his faith. They displayed their middle finger in his vicinity at least five times: while holding paper, using a computer mouse, pointing at his computer screen, and twice while touching their foreheads. One colleague accused him of “covetousness,” another of being overly focused on “productivity.” R. 34-10 at 102-03. Two others mentioned something about setting him up to “wreck 'his truck,” although nothing of the sort ever happened. R. 30-3 at 58. His supervisor at one point seemed “slightly agitated” when he begged off of an optional breakfast meeting, see R. 34-10 at 103, and at another point gave him an odd stare when he walked into a room, see R. 30-3 at 61. An otherwise positive performance review described him as “rigid” during “interpersonal exchanges.” R. 34-10 at 104. One time he discovered that someone had moved some shirts he had put on top of his locker so that they hung a few inches over the edge.

Henry found off-duty phone calls especially aggravating because they “interrupt[ed] his ministry.” R. 34-7 at 121. In 2010, as a result, the bank agreed not to call him outside working hours unless a “clear operational need” arose. Id. at 28, 65. His coworkers allegedly ignored that agreement twice: once to ask him his shirt size for an order that had to be submitted before he returned to the office, and once to tell him about a last-minute uniform change. Henry filed internal grievances with the bank after each call, alleging religious discrimination.

The bank hired an outside consultant, Dr. Carol Beavers; to address the conflicts between Henry and his coworkers. Beavers recommended that Henry be placed on paid administrative leave pending an investigation into his complaints. Henry was “agreeable” to the idea of staying out temporarily but was “adamant” that he wanted to work until the branch shut its doors. R. 346 at 93. The bank’s investigation ended on May 17, 2011, and turned up no evidence of untoward behavior toward Henry. Henry filed a religious discrimination charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission one day later.

The end of the investigation put the bank to a choice: to lay off Henry on schedule on July 31 or to lay him off early. Unsure how to eliminate the tension between Henry and his coworkers, the bank created a compromise. On the one hand, it laid him off on May 31, two months before the complete layoff took effect. On the other hand, it treated him as if he had been laid off on schedule: It paid him as if July 31 were his last day of work, it extended his health insurance coverage through those two extra months, and it offered him a severance package identical to the one every other bank employee received. Henry rejected the package and filed a second EEOC charge, this one alleging that his firing constituted unlawful retaliation for his first charge. When the EEOC declined to act on either charge, he sued the bank in federal district court. The district court rejected his claim as a matter of law and granted summary judgment to the bank.

Hostile Work Environment. Title VII outlaws religious discrimination in the *845 workplace. But it does not set forth a “general civility code,” and it does not protect employees from the “ordinary tribulations” accompanying run-of-the-mine, if sometimes petty, social interactions. Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 524 U.S. 775, 788, 118 S.Ct. 2275, 141 L.Ed.2d 662 (1998). The Act thus targets conduct that “unreasonably interfered with [an employee’s] work performance by creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive work environment.” Haff ord v. Seidner, 183 F.3d 506, 512 (6th Cir.1999).

The indignities that Henry claims to have suffered fall short of that bar. Here is the sum total of them: some stray gestures and glances, a few scattered comments and calls, and one mysteriously moved stack of shirts. Offensive though these incidents may have seemed to him, they do not paint a picture of an environment creeping with anti-Christian sentiment. They are better seen as the fruits of “ordinary workplace friction” that no reasonable juror could deem “severe or pervasive.” Warf v. U.S. Dep’t of Veterans Affairs, 713 F.3d 874, 878 (6th Cir.2013).

Henry tries to head off this conclusion by emphasizing that he has documented “at least thirty-five (35) incidents of hostility,” a refrain made in his submissions to the district court as well. See Appellant’s Br. at 7, 16, 32; R. 34-3 at 2, 4. The trouble is, he does not tell us the rest of the incidents on that list, and on summary judgment we cannot credit what we cannot see.

Henry separately argues that his case cannot be distinguished from our unpublished decision in Calderon v. Ford Motor Credit Co., 300 Fed.Appx. 362 (6th Cir.2008). He is wrong. There, supervisors called Calderon a “f[* * *]ing spie,” barred her from a department lunch because “they [didn’t] want [ ] Mexicans” there, remarked that Mexicans “make straw hats,” asked her for a “little Mexican bean,” and ordered her to “look down” when spoken to because she wasn’t “white enough” to look up. Id. at 369 (second and third alterations in original).

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